Lyndal Parker’s research while affiliated with University of Technology Sydney and other places

What is this page?


This page lists works of an author who doesn't have a ResearchGate profile or hasn't added the works to their profile yet. It is automatically generated from public (personal) data to further our legitimate goal of comprehensive and accurate scientific recordkeeping. If you are this author and want this page removed, please let us know.

Publications (1)


Diversifying methods in educational research: what we learned at Winter School
  • Article

July 2018

·

15 Reads

·

5 Citations

Australasian Journal of Engineering Education

·

Lyndal Parker

·

Lesley Jolly

Australasian Association for Engineering Education (AAEE) has been sponsoring a Winter School in Engineering Education Research Methods since 2011. This paper describes how in 2017 attendees at the School applied what they had learned about a little-used data-gathering technique: observation. Starting with a Program Logic analysis, which identifies what an intervention ought to be doing, and hence what kind of evidence needs to be collected to describe its effect, some participants who had attended prior Winter Schools, were given the chance to collect the evidence. They found observation to be much harder to do well than one would think. This paper describes their experience and argues for the use of observational techniques in order to triangulate our data-gathering methods and improve the quality of our educational research. However, we also learned that a great benefit of observation comes from sustained reflection on the process and the data collected. Without such reflection, we argue observation is likely to produce rather thin results. abbriviations: AAEE - Australasian Association of Engineering Education; JEE - Australasian Journal of Engineering Education; WS2017 - 2017 Winter School

Citations (1)


... there are only two, housed in the Universities of Toronto and Manitoba) and none in Australia (Deters et al. 2023), and many graduate students and academics who find themselves migrating into EER do so motivated by their desire to improve engineering education (Bezerra Rodrigues, Paul, and Seniuk Cicek 2021; Dart et al. 2023;Seniuk Cicek et al. 2020). Both regions have developed seminars (Burke et al. 2020) or minischools (Matemba, Parker, and Jolly 2018) to introduce engineers to qualitative research methodologies to build EER capacity. In addition, unlike scholars in the United States, scholars in Australia and Canada both struggle with funding EER research (Burke et al. 2020;Deters et al. 2021). ...

Reference:

Journeying into EER
Diversifying methods in educational research: what we learned at Winter School
  • Citing Article
  • July 2018

Australasian Journal of Engineering Education